We apologize for Proteopedia being slow to respond. For the past two years, a new implementation of Proteopedia has been being built. Soon, it will replace this 18-year old system. All existing content will be moved to the new system at a date that will be announced here.

1qc5

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
-
[[Image:1qc5.jpg|left|200px]]
+
{{Seed}}
 +
[[Image:1qc5.png|left|200px]]
<!--
<!--
Line 9: Line 10:
{{STRUCTURE_1qc5| PDB=1qc5 | SCENE= }}
{{STRUCTURE_1qc5| PDB=1qc5 | SCENE= }}
-
'''I DOMAIN FROM INTEGRIN ALPHA1-BETA1'''
+
===I DOMAIN FROM INTEGRIN ALPHA1-BETA1===
-
==Overview==
+
<!--
-
Most mammalian cells and some pathogenic bacteria are capable of adhering to collagenous substrates in processes mediated by specific cell surface adherence molecules. Crystal structures of collagen-binding regions of the human integrin alpha(2)beta(1) and a Staphylococcus aureus adhesin reveal a "trench" on the surface of both of these proteins. This trench can accommodate a collagen triple-helical structure and presumably represents the ligand-binding site (Emsley, J., King, S. L., Bergelson, J. M., and Liddington, R. C. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 28512-28517; Symersky, J., Patti, J. M., Carson, M., House-Pompeo, K., Teale, M., Moore, D., Jin, L., Schneider, A., DeLucas, L. J., Hook, M., and Narayana, S. V. L. (1997) Nat. Struct. Biol. 4, 833-838). We report here the crystal structure of the alpha subunit I domain from the alpha(1)beta(1) integrin. This collagen-binding protein also contains a trench on one face in which the collagen triple helix may be docked. Furthermore, we compare the collagen-binding mechanisms of the human alpha(1) integrin I domain and the A domain from the S. aureus collagen adhesin, Cna. Although the S. aureus and human proteins have unrelated amino acid sequences, secondary structure composition, and cation requirements for effective ligand binding, both proteins bind at multiple sites within one collagen molecule, with the sites in collagen varying in their affinity for the adherence molecule. We propose that (i) these evolutionarily dissimilar adherence proteins recognize collagen via similar mechanisms, (ii) the multisite, multiclass protein/ligand interactions observed in these two systems result from a binding-site trench, and (iii) this unusual binding mechanism may be thematic for proteins binding extended, rigid ligands that contain repeating structural motifs.
+
The line below this paragraph, {{ABSTRACT_PUBMED_10455165}}, adds the Publication Abstract to the page
 +
(as it appears on PubMed at http://www.pubmed.gov), where 10455165 is the PubMed ID number.
 +
-->
 +
{{ABSTRACT_PUBMED_10455165}}
==About this Structure==
==About this Structure==
Line 26: Line 30:
[[Category: Cell adhesion]]
[[Category: Cell adhesion]]
[[Category: Integrin]]
[[Category: Integrin]]
-
''Page seeded by [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca OCA ] on Sat May 3 06:07:03 2008''
+
 
 +
''Page seeded by [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca OCA ] on Tue Jul 29 03:31:09 2008''

Revision as of 00:31, 29 July 2008

Template:STRUCTURE 1qc5

I DOMAIN FROM INTEGRIN ALPHA1-BETA1

Template:ABSTRACT PUBMED 10455165

About this Structure

1QC5 is a Protein complex structure of sequences from Homo sapiens. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Trench-shaped binding sites promote multiple classes of interactions between collagen and the adherence receptors, alpha(1)beta(1) integrin and Staphylococcus aureus cna MSCRAMM., Rich RL, Deivanayagam CC, Owens RT, Carson M, Hook A, Moore D, Symersky J, Yang VW, Narayana SV, Hook M, J Biol Chem. 1999 Aug 27;274(35):24906-13. PMID:10455165

Page seeded by OCA on Tue Jul 29 03:31:09 2008

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools